Tata Steel 2013 Round 8 - Magnus Leads

The 2013 Tata Steel Chess tournament is taking place from 12-27 January in Wijk Aan Zee in the Netherlands.

This famous annual tournament has three separate single round-robin competitions, the A, B, and C Groups, each featuring 14 players.

The strongest tournament is the A Group and this year features 6 out of the top 10 ranked players; world champion Vishy Anand, world #1 Magnus Carlsen, defending champion Lev Aronian, rising star Fabiano Caruana, world #6 Sergey Karjakin, and US champion Hikaru Nakamura.

Chess.com has live coverage and commentary of round 9 on Tuesday with GM Magesh & The Poet. See here for the latest details (scroll down the page).

Chess.com coverage starts at 05:30 Pacific, 08:30 Eastern in the US (13:30 UTC).

.Round 8 - Official website report

While a fierce snow storm battered Wijk aan Zee, inside De Moriaan the audience was treated to a quiet round, occasionally upset by blunders that only can be explained in one way: Wijk aan Zee fatigue. The first player to drop a piece was Hou Yifan, who blundered a piece in a worse endgame against Levon Aronian, chasing a perpetual check that didn't exist. Instead of recapturing the e5-pawn, Black played 25...Rxa2? only to realize that after 26.Kb1 Rxf2 27.exd6 Rb7 28.Ka1 the intended 28...Rb6 with the idea Ra6 doesn't work after 29.Rd2.

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Soon after, several players in Group B joined the blunderfest. Nils Grandelius completely overlooked 13...Ne4? 14.Qxe5! against Predrag Nikolic, but Arkadij Naiditsch topped them all with the inexplicable 21...Bxh5? 22.Bxh5 handing the point to Robin van Kampen on a platter.

Pedrag Nikolic (left) defeated Nils Grandelius in Group B

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Back in the A-group Anand-Sokolov, Giri-Wang Hao and Leko-Harikrishna ended rapidly in a draw.

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Fabiano Caruana had an overwhelming position after the opening against Erwin l'Ami, but after several mistakes before the first time control the Italian Grandmaster had to start all over. Which he did successfully, raking in the full point before the second time control.

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Meanwhile Loek van Wely wasn't so lucky against Hikaru Nakamura. The American Grandmaster again confirmed his status as a “Spartelkoning” (Squirm King), to quote his Dutch opponent, and survived another lost endgame as he did earlier against Sokolov.

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Today's last man standing was Magnus Carlsen, who again takes the sole lead after defeating Sergey Karjakin in 92 moves. The critical moment occurred at move 67, when Carlsen decided force matters with 67.g4!? hxg4 68.h5. Karjakin fell for the bluff with 68...Rh1?, where he could have a draw after 68...gxh5 69.f5 h4 70.f5 Kg6 71.Rxf8 Kf5! and black will force a perpetual check, for example: 72.Rh8 g3 72.Ke1 g3 74.Kf1 Rb1 75.Kg2 Rb2.

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Group A Standings After 8 Rounds

1

Carlsen, Magnus

NOR

2861

6

2

Anand, Viswanathan

IND

2772

5½

3

Aronian, Levon

ARM

2802

5

4

Nakamura, Hikaru

USA

2769

5

5

Harikrishna, Pentala

IND

2698

4½

6

Karjakin, Sergey

RUS

2780

4½

7

Leko, Peter

HUN

2735

4

8

Caruana, Fabiano

ITA

2781

4

9

Van Wely, Loek

NED

2679

3½

10

Wang, Hao

CHN

2752

3½

11

Giri, Anish

NED

2720

3

12

Sokolov, Ivan

NED

2663

2½

13

L'Ami, Erwin

NED

2627

2½

14

Hou, Yifan

CHN

2603

2½

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In Grandmaster Group B the crowd was delighted to see 61-year-old Jan Timman win for the third time in a row, thus joining Richard Rapport and Sergey Movsesian in the lead at 5½ out of 8. The Dutch living legend outplayed World Junior Champion Alexander Ipatov from a slightly better endgame.

Jan Timman joined the leaders in Group B

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Group B Round 8 Results

Van Kampen, Robin

1-0

Naiditsch, Arkadij

Timman, Jan H

1-0

Ipatov, Alexander

Nikolic, Predrag

1-0

Grandelius, Nils

Rapport, Richard

0-1

Smeets, Jan

Edouard, Romain

1-0

Dubov, Daniil

Ernst, Sipke

0-1

Turov, Maxim

Movsesian, Sergei

½-½

Tiviakov, Sergei

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Group B Standings After 8 Rounds

1

Rapport, Richard

HUN

2621

5½

2

Movsesian, Sergei

ARM

2688

5½

3

Timman, Jan H

NED

2566

5½

4

Naiditsch, Arkadij

GER

2708

5

5

Dubov, Daniil

RUS

2600

4½

6

Smeets, Jan

NED

2615

4½

7

Tiviakov, Sergei

NED

2655

4

8

Edouard, Romain

FRA

2686

4

9

Turov, Maxim

RUS

2630

4

10

Van Kampen, Robin

NED

2581

3½

11

Grandelius, Nils

SWE

2572

3

12

Nikolic, Predrag

BIH

2619

3

13

Ipatov, Alexander

TUR

2587

2

14

Ernst, Sipke

NED

2556

2

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Italian Sabino Brunello again caught up with Fernanda Peralta to lead Group C with 6½ out of 8. While Peralta was unable to beat Mark van der Werf, head of the Dutch Chess Federation, Brunello ground down Krikor Mekhitarian's Tarrasch Defence. Local player David Klein is one point behind the leaders after beating Ukraine's Oleg Romanishin. The Dutch International Master now requires a win in round 9 for a GM-norm.

Man this suckhjinder Pal the Indian talking crap about Carlsen.. man Anand is the worst WC in history, he's terrible, why you talking bro?

The reason Karjakin was scared was because of f5 f6+ where he would have to play Kg6 Ke5! and sac his bishop, maybe he didnt see the computer moves which forced the perpetual, and instead thought he would lose by losing his bishop so he doesnt play gxh5.

Man I can't wait until Carlsen crushes Anand in the next WC then we will see your sorry excuses.

I just went through the Carlsen game. It seems to me that he is deliberately staying away from theory, and looking to get to "the end game as soon as possible. Playing to his strengths? He did the same thing with "Hari". How does one prepare for such a player?

"In carlsen-Karjakin game even a 1400 player like me would have played 68...gxh5 to get two connected passed pawns...I think its fear of Carlsen that makes GMs blunder on the board."

There's a good reason why Karjakin didn't play gxh5. It's because of f5, and black faces many nasty threats. However, the engines show that black can actually get away with a perpetual. But this is not easy for a human to see, particularly not for Karjakin who had only minutes left on his clock.

The purpose of Rh1 was to stop h6+, because the king can't take the pawn (the bishop is hanging). Rh1 may look natural, but it's actually a losing move.

Before making rather silly comments which imply that Karjakin played weaker than a 1400 ELO rated player, please sit down and at least analyze the game. The endgame is more complicated than it appears to be, and even white has to be careful. Or at least enlighten yourself and watch some of the analyses on YouTube or on the other chess sites.

"The critical moment occurred at move 67, when Carlsen decided force matters with 67.g4!? hxg4 68.h5. Karjakin fell for the bluff with 68...Rh1?, where he could have a draw after 68...gxh5 69.f5 h4 70.f5 Kg6 71.Rxf8 Kf5!..."

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